Space will also be reserved for weekend vendors to set up kiosks at $60 a day.

The Kingsbridge National Ice Center boasts nine hockey rinks, a 5000-seat arena built for music concerts and other sporting events, and ice-skating programs for kids.

“We don’t think Mercado Mirabo is a bad project,” said Borough President spokesman John DeSio. “We just think the rink is better.”

To help convince Diaz to support the project, KNIC committed to pay workers a “living wage” of $10 an hour, as opposed to the state minumum wage of $7.25.

But Adam Zucker, YWA’s director of business development, balked at requiring vendors to give an hourly wage to its workers. YWA is not required to give a living wage since their project is not seeking any public subsidies.

They also believe their “more fleshed out” concept is in tune to the community’s needs.

While Councilman Oliver Koppel, whose district takes in some of the neighborhood, supports the ice rink project, local Councilman Fernando Cabrera could have the final say once the project chosen by the City Economic Development Corp. reaches the council for final approval.

The council generally supports the decision of the local councilmember on projects. Cabrera has so far not decided which project he likes, although he has express concerns about the traffic the rink would generate in the already traffic-choked neighborhood.

YWA has also asked Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who supported a failed effort to put a major retail center into the armory, to support its project.

The Economic Development Corporation is expected to make a decision by the end of the year.

“We continue to make progress towards a selection that will achieve the vision for this important site by creating jobs and generating economic investment in the Bronx,” said EDC spokesman Kyle Sklerov.

The winning bid will then go through a Uniform Land Use Review Procedure, then to the borough president, and finally to the City Council.